Emily Lakdawalla • Oct 08, 2009
LCROSS Centaur separation and braking burn successful
LCROSS and its Centaur upper stage have separated successfully, and the LCROSS shepherd spacecraft has braked in order to follow behind the Centaur when both impact the Moon tomorrow. Everything seemed to go perfectly. Here's a four-frame animation (covering about 5 minutes of real time) of the Centaur slowly drifting away from LCROSS. It's always special to see artifacts that we built here on Earth, floating in the utterly alien environment of space.
That's it for me for the night; I've got my alarm set for 3:15 local time tomorrow morning, when I will get up and start Tweeting away about the upcoming impact. I have shipped off my toddler to her grandparents, but the 5-month-old needs to be with me. I am quite sure she'll wake up at some critical moment; but that's why they invented pacifiers, right?
See you all in about 7 hours...